ShanghaiZhan: All Things Global Marketing, Advertising, Tech & Platforms

Ali Kazmi & Bryce Whitwam

ShanghaiZhan is a raw, lively, and regular debate about global tech, advertising, creativity & the intersection of it all. Join hosts Ali Kazmi and Bryce Whitwam, for timely discussions on the world of marketing and advertising.

  1. 4D AGO

    The Chinese Railway Revolution with David Feng

    Welcome, David Feng, a railway visionary, explores the transformative impact of China's high-speed rail system. They discuss the sociological implications, the changing nature of work, the competition between air travel and rail, and the future of urbanization in China. David shares insights on the sustainability of railway growth, the potential for exporting China's railway model, and the integration of electric vehicles with rail systems. The conversation culminates in David's recommendations for must-try railway journeys in China. Takeaways China's railway system is a model for urbanization. High-speed rail is reshaping social dynamics in cities. Work habits are changing due to improved rail connectivity. Air travel is declining in favor of high-speed rail. Domestic tourism is on the rise thanks to rail access. Railway growth faces sustainability challenges amid debt. Exporting China's railway model is complex but possible. Future rail projects may connect more Asian countries. EVs and rail systems can complement each other. Urbanization will evolve with changing population dynamics. 00:00 Introduction to Shanghai Zhan and the Railway Miracle 02:17 David Feng's Journey into Railway Systems 04:55 Sociological Impact of High-Speed Rail 07:43 Changing Work Habits and the Gig Economy 10:08 The Future of Airlines in a Rail-Dominated Landscape 12:36 Domestic Travel Trends and Tourism in China 14:58 Financial Sustainability of China's Railway System 17:25 The Evolution of Urban Identity and Hukou System 25:12 The Evolution of China's Rail Network 25:53 Exporting Railway Technology: Opportunities and Challenges 26:57 Integrating Local Transport with Chinese Rail Systems 31:33 Competitive Advantages in Global Railway Infrastructure 33:34 The Future of EVs and Railways: A Complementary Relationship 38:29 The Future of Railway Infrastructure in Asia 40:03 Memorable Railway Journeys: Recommendations and Experiences 41:29 Urbanization and the Future of Railway Infrastructure

    42 min
  2. 11/30/2025

    Why China Still Can’t Crack the World Cup: Cameron Wilson

    The 2026 FIFA World Cup is just around the corner, and Asia will be sending eight teams to the biggest tournament in football history — expanded to 48 nations across the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Japan, South Korea, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Australia, Qatar, Iraq, and Uzbekistan have all secured their spots, representing a continent where football passion runs deep. But there's one glaring absence from this list: China. The world's most populous nation will once again watch from the sidelines. It's a paradox that becomes more puzzling with each passing tournament — how can a country with such resources, ambition, and a president who personally dreams of World Cup glory, fail so consistently at the world's most popular sport? To help us unpack this mystery, we're joined by Cameron Wilson — a longtime China resident, cultural observer, and arguably the most passionate voice in English-language Chinese football coverage. 1. Let’s start with the basics: What first drew you into Chinese football? 2. You've long argued that football is a reflection of society. What do you mean by that? 3. What role does fandom play in Chinese football today? Is it the same as Europe? 4. What's the difference between basketball and football in China? 5. What's the culture of success for football in China? 4. Is the gap between watching football and building football widening in China? 5. Let’s flip it: What has China done right in football? 6. You also release music under the alias Shanghai Ultra, and your latest album is called Wavering Loyalty. Why that title?

    40 min
  3. 11/13/2025

    Pirates in the Navy: David Mayo on the Role of Creativity in the Future of Advertising

    The agency model isn’t just unraveling — it’s turning into a navy full of pirates. As holding companies consolidate century-old brands, AI accelerates production, and CMOs prioritize short-term numbers over long-term brand building, the industry is entering its most radical reinvention yet. The ships are getting bigger… but the real action is happening on the pirate boats circling them. To unpack what this means for creativity, talent, and the future of agencies, we’re joined by David Mayo — veteran strategist, former WPP leader, founder of ADNA/NADA, and long-time provocateur behind some of the industry’s most iconic brand transformations. David’s mantra, “Think like the Navy, act like the pirates,” becomes a lens for everything we discuss. This conversation cuts past nostalgia and into what’s actually changing — how consolidation alters creativity, why small senior “pirate crews” may beat giant fleets, where AI elevates (and flattens) taste, and why brave clients still make the bravest work. This isn’t about mourning the old model — it’s a blueprint for how pirates and navies will coexist in what comes next. 1. Where did this mantra come from, and what does it really mean for how agencies should operate? 2. Has efficiency quietly become the enemy of originality? 3. In consolidation, what are CMOs really buying — governance, speed, convenience, or safety? 4. What gets lost when rosters shrink and risk disappears? 5. Are century-old creative agencies closing because of economics, structure, or culture? 6. Are today’s brands less emotional and more functional — and is that a permanent consumer shift? 7. In markets like China, where consumers hop between thousands of product options, does traditional brand building still matter? 8. How do challenger products (like black toothpaste with gold) disrupt giants such as Colgate — and why do big brands often miss these trends? 9. Will creative differentiation increasingly come from influencers rather than brands themselves? 10. Are small, senior “boutique crews” better positioned than holding companies to deliver breakthrough work? 11. What type of senior leaders are thriving right now — and what skill sets are actually evolving? 12. How will in-house studios, AI tools, and brand-side agency veterans reshape the future creative ecosystem? 13. Are we moving toward generalists powered by AI, or specialists supported by AI? 14. Is the “Uberization” of agencies — on-demand teams assembled per brief — a viable future model? 15. How should marketers think about risk, creativity, and the narrowing “corridors of freedom”? 16. Why do brave marketers still create the best work — and how can today’s CMOs champion creativity amid shrinking timelines and rising pressure?

    54 min
  4. 10/28/2025

    The Gen Z Agency Talent Paradox with Shane McEwen

    Research from NYU Stern professor Suzy Welch shows that only 2% of Generation Z possess the core values that hiring managers value most: achievement, learning, and an "unbridled desire to work." Instead, Gen Z emphasizes self-care, authentic self-expression, and helping others—a values mismatch that Welch suggests could "reshape the future of work." However, this clash of generational values occurs at a critical moment for advertising: AI tools are replacing the entry-level roles that once served as the industry's training ground, while agencies claim they desperately need young talent for cultural insights and fresh perspectives. To help us understand this paradox, we're joined by Shane McEwen, Global Talent Acquisition Director at Stagwell—one of the challenger holding companies actively reimagining what a modern agency network looks like. With over 15 years of experience building teams across technology, media, and advertising sectors, Shane is at the center of this generational showdown. At Stagwell, he's responsible for attracting and developing talent across their portfolio of modern marketing agencies, from Assembly to 72andSunny. His role forces him to confront the key question: If young people don't value "workcentrism" and AI can perform their traditional tasks anyway, what is the business case for hiring Gen Z? 1. How has your China experience impact your career now in New York? 2. Are we misunderstanding Gen Z or are they misunderstanding us? 3. How do you establish a corporate culture when everyone is remote working? 4. What about going to clients? How do you establish connections with clients? 5. How do you get feedback from different teams and agencies? 6. How do you keep that junior/senior mentorship that's fundamental to agency culture? 7. Which of the interns will you end up hiring for full-time gigs? 8. How do you maintain the passion after the first 2-year "honeymoon period"? 9. What do you see the skills changing now that the AI is in play? 10. What about displaced senior talent? How can they stay in the industry? 11. Are ad agencies confining themselves to a small part of the marketing mix? 12. Any advice for educators?

    42 min
  5. 10/05/2025

    Beyond the Holding Company: Thriving in the Ad Talent Shake-Up with Jean-Michel Wu

    The advertising industry's talent crisis isn't coming—it's here. As AI automates junior roles, consolidation eliminates mid-level positions, and holding companies restructure at unprecedented speed, professionals at every level are asking: what's next? We're joined by Jean-Michel Wu, a two-decade talent expert who has held leadership roles at creative and media agencies, including WPP, IPG, and beyond. Now the founder of Tripitakka Consulting, he coaches individuals and organizations navigating this transformation. This conversation isn't about doom-scrolling the industry's decline—it's about the practical shifts happening right now and how to position yourself for what comes next. 1. What shift in the talent market are agencies not seeing yet—and why do talent people see trends before the headlines? 2. Publicis restructured dramatically a decade ago. Were they right to move fast, and what can we learn from that now? 3. What type of senior leaders are successfully evolving their skill sets, and what are they doing differently? 4. From entry-level to executive—what's the one skill that matters most in this new landscape? 5. Are we moving toward generalist roles powered by AI, or specialist experts with AI support? 6. How does the consulting model compare to agencies when it comes to talent structure and compensation? 7. What's the fundamental role of talent management in 2025—and how must it change? 8. Why is psychological safety suddenly a talent function priority? 9. If clients change how they pay agencies, will that finally force the "one P&L" issue? 10. You coach people who've been laid off. What limiting beliefs do you encounter, and how do they break through? 11. The fractional/consulting life—is it actually viable, or just a nice story we tell ourselves? 12. What advice do you have for entry-level professionals when agencies don't know what to do with them anymore?

    43 min

Ratings & Reviews

4.9
out of 5
9 Ratings

About

ShanghaiZhan is a raw, lively, and regular debate about global tech, advertising, creativity & the intersection of it all. Join hosts Ali Kazmi and Bryce Whitwam, for timely discussions on the world of marketing and advertising.

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